Samuel De Champlain: The Father Of New France

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If it wasn’t for Samuel de Champlain we wouldn’t have the settlements of New France and the city of Quebec in Canada. Samuel de Champlain is the person who governed the settlements and Quebec. We wouldn’t have some maps that he hed made or the fur trading company he had with the Native Americans.
Samuel de Champlain was a French and Canadian navigator, cartographer, draughtsmen, soldier, explorer, geographer, ethnologist, diplomat, and a Chronicle. Samuel de Champlain was mostly an explorer and navigator in the time of 1603 through 1615. Samuel de Champlain served very briefly in the French army. He was called “The Father of New France”. He was most likely born a Protestant then converted into a Catholic as a young adult. Samuel de Champlain discovered a lake and named it Lake Champlain in his name. Samuel de Champlain was taken prisoner when Quebec was by the English from the French.When Quebec was returned back to the French, Samuel de Champlain sailed back to the city of Quebec for the final time in 1633. He rebuilt the fort he had previously built a quarter century earlier. Samuel de Champlain was born on the day of August 13, 1574 in Hiers-Brouage, France. He died on the day of Christmas, in the year of 1635 in Quebec City, Canada.
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Samuel de Champlain went on his first voyages with uncle to Panama, Spain to the West Indies on a series of trading voyages. He went from Spain to the West Indies in the years of 1601 thourgh 1603. Samuel de Champlain then went to the present day Nova Scotia in the year of 1603. Then Samuel de Champlain went to New England in the year of 1605. In 1608 Samuel de Champlain returned to North America with the Sieur de Monts. Samuel de Champlain discovered the lake that bears his name 1609. Samuel de Champlain had made other explorations of what are now Northern New York, the Ottawa River, and the eastern Great